The Use of Meaningful Activity in Neurological Rehabilitation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

The Use of Meaningful Activity in Neurological Rehabilitation

Description:

... Therapy in Motor Control and Motor Learning Motor control is the ... Therapy in Motor Control and Motor Learning Introduction to the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:127
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: HeikoLo
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Use of Meaningful Activity in Neurological Rehabilitation


1
The Use of Meaningful Activity in Neurological
Rehabilitation
  • An Occupational Therapy
  • Approach to Motor Control and Motor Learning

Heiko Lorenzen, Bc. of Health in OT Döpfer School
for Occupational Therapy Cologne, Germany
2
Overview
  • Introduction to Occupational Therapy
  • Introduction to CIMT
  • Application of CIMT in Occupational Therapy
  • Case Example Musician
  • Discussion

3
Basic Assumptions in Occupational Therapy
  • Occupation refers to all meaningful activities
    that make up an individual life
  • The engagement in occupations is associated with
    participation, health, well-being and quality of
    life
  • Occupational therapists aim to engage their
    patients in activities that are meaningful to
    them in order to facilitate participation

4
Occupational Therapy in Motor Control and Motor
Learning
  • Motor control is the ability to fixate the body
    and to move the body (Gilmore Spaulding 2001)
  • Motor learning refers to changes in movement
    behavior as a result of practice or experience
    (Gilmore Spaulding 2001)
  • Occupational therapists make use of three
    different interventions in motor learning (AOTA
    2008)
  • Preparatory methods
  • Use of purposeful (therapeutic) activities
  • Engagement in desired occupations

5
Introduction to the Constraint Induced Movement
Therapy (CIMT)
  • CIMT is based on the learned disuse after the
    onset of neurological disorder

6
Development of learned disuse
(figure adapted from brainworksrehab.com)
Injury / Stroke
Unsuccessful motor attempts
Feelings of failure
Behavior suppressed
Learned disuse of limb
7
Introduction to CIMT
  • The downward spiral of disuse leads to greater
    disability of the affected arm and hand (Wolf et
    al 2006)
  • Use it or lose it!
  • Affected limb needs to be forced into activity
  • Typical CIMT program 3 hours/day of therapy, 5
    days/week for 4 weeks 5 6 hours at home
    (Earley et al 2010)

8
Introduction to CIMT
  • Criteria for application of the CIMT method (Wolf
    et al 2006)
  • 6 months post-stroke
  • No or mild cognitive impairments (MMSE 24)
  • Ambulatory without the use of assistive devices
  • 45 shoulder flexion and abduction
  • 45 external rotation at the shoulder
  • Full elbow extension
  • 45 forearm supination and pronation
  • 5 wrist extension
  • 5 digital exension (specifically thumb, index
    middle finger)
  • Ability to grasp and release a washcloth 3 times
    within 1 min.

9
Application of CIMT in Occupational Therapy
  • Application of preparatory methods
  • stretching of the affected upper extremity
  • joint mobilization
  • training the strength of the hand
  • taktile stimulation

10
Application of CIMT in Occupational Therapy
  • Use of purposeful (therapeutic) activities
  • practicing to unscrew a bottle of water
  • practicing to use cutlery
  • practicing to grasp and move a table tennis
    racket
  • practicing the typical movements for playing a
    certain musical instrument
  • practicing to use a jig saw

11
Application of CIMT in Occupational Therapy
12
Application of CIMT in Occupational Therapy
  • Performance of meaningful activities (ideally
    within the own context)
  • using cutlery at home or in a restaurant
  • playing table tennis with a friend or in a club
  • playing the musical instrument
  • doing craftswork at home or at work

13
Case Example Musicianfrom Earley et al (2010)
  • 52 year old woman, 4 years after left-hemispheric
    stroke
  • Decreased gait functions
  • Decreased strength and decreased use of the
    affected right upper extremity
  • Difficultuies in performing several basic ADLs

14
Case Example Musician
  • Preparatory methods
  • Manual stretching of anatomic structures
  • Progressive resistive exercises
  • Weight bearing and joint compression
  • Performance of purposeful activities
  • Simulation of violin playing
  • Engagement in cooking activities
  • Arranging a photo album

15
Case Example Musician
  • Engagement in a variety of meaningful activities
    at home during 5 6 hours daily
  • After functional improvements and increased
    self-confidence this included also practicing to
    play her violin

16
Case Example Musician
  • Some of the results
  • 50 increase of grip strength and pinch strengh
  • Improvement of fine motor hand use measured with
    the Nine-Hole-Peg Test (intake score 28 s /
    discharge score 21 s)
  • 4 years after the stroke and 1 month after the
    CIMT intervention the musician returned to her
    role of playing the violin in a community
    symphony orchestra

17
Literature
  • American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA)
    (2008) Occupational Therapy Practice Framework
    Domain and Process (2nd ed.). American Journal of
    Occupational Therapy, 62, 625-683
  • Earley D, Herlache E, Skelton DR (2010) Use of
    occupations and activities in a modified
    constraint-induced movement therapy program a
    musicians triumph over chronic hemiparesis from
    stroke. American Journal of Occupational Therapy,
    64, 735-744
  • Gilmore PE, Spaulding SJ (2001) Motor control and
    motor learning implications for treatment of
    individuals post stroke. Physical Occupational
    Therapy in Geriatrics, 20(1), 1-15
  • Townsend E, Polatajko H eds.(2007) Enabling
    occupation II advancing an occupational therapy
    vision for health, well-being and justice through
    occupation. Ottawa CAOT
  • Wolf SL, Winstein CJ, Miller JP, Taub E, Uswatte
    G, Morris D et al. (2006) Effect of
    constraint-induced movement therapy on upper
    extremity functions 3 to 9 months after stroke.
    JAMA, 296, 2095-2104

18
Thank you for your attention!
  • Heiko Lorenzen
  • Referent and Lecturer for Occupational Therapy
  • Referent for ICF in Neurological Rehabilitation
  • Referent for Fatigue Management
  • Contact heiko.lorenzen_at_web.de
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com